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North Korea (Superthread)

South Korea thinking ahead:

http://english.yonhapnews.co.kr/business/2014/11/18/6/0503000000AEN20141118006200320F.html

S. Korea to raise $500 bln for unification: regulator
2014/11/18 17:00
By Kim Boram

SEOUL, Nov. 18 (Yonhap) -- South Korea plans to raise US$500 billion largely from the public sector, without raising taxes, to help North Korea prepare for a future reunification, the top financial regulator said Tuesday.

In a financial blueprint for a future North-South unification, the Financial Services Commission (FSC) said an estimated $500 billion is needed to raise North Korea's gross domestic product (GDP) per capita from $1,251 in 2013 to $10,000 within 20 years after a possible unification.

It will also spend an additional $175 billion on infrastructure and industrial development, it added.

North Korea's GDP totaled 34 trillion won ($31 billion) as of end-2013, a level equivalent to that of South Korea in 1971 and a mere 2 percent of the South's GDP in 2013.

The South's GDP was 42.5 times higher than the North's in 2013, much higher than the 9.7-fold difference between West Germany and East Germany ahead of their 1990 unification.

The FSC said state-run policy financing agencies, including the Korea Development Bank (KDB) and Korea Exim Bank, will play a major role in raising the funds, as Germany's government-owned development bank, or the KfW, did 24 years ago.

The state agencies will take responsibility for up to 60 percent of the total expenses by running development projects in North Korea, while the rest will be raised by collecting overseas development aid (ODA) and private and public investments.

"In the initial stage of unification, the government will lead the North Korean development by using state funds and projects, and then the ODA and private investments can be utilized," said FSC Chairman Shin Je-yoon.

The FSC suggested the introduction of a commercial banking system and the establishment of a policy financing body to pursue stable economic integration between the two countries.

It also noted that currency conversion is the most sophisticated issue in unification as the exchange rate would be largely conditioned on political negotiations and social consensus.

"We have to consider many factors, including the economic gap between the two countries and macroeconomic variables before introducing a currency system to the North," said Shin. "The monetary integration should be decided after comprehensive discussion."

  East German currency was exchanged for West German deutsche marks at a rate of 1 to 1, although the market rate was 4 to 1, according to the FSC.

The overestimated currency conversion helped stabilize the livelihoods of workers from East Germany in the short term, but soon resulted in a sudden wage hike, which damaged the profitability of East German companies.

brk@yna.co.kr
 
Kim Jong Un's sister on the rise as well?

Reuters

North Korea's 'princess' moves closer to center of power

SEOUL (Reuters) - In her slim-fitting trouser suits and black-heeled shoes, Kim Yo Jong cuts a contrasting figure to her pudgy older brother, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un.

On Thursday, state media said the younger Kim, 27, had taken a senior position in the ruling Workers' Party, confirming speculation she had moved closer to the center of power in the secretive state.

It named her as a vice director alongside the head of the Propaganda and Agitation Department, which handles ideological messaging through the media, arts and culture.

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Just picked this up:

http://www.msn.com/en-ca/news/world/the-new-defense-secretary-who-wanted-to-bomb-north-korea/ar-BBgfzj9

 
If conditions in the US are so bad as he claims, he might as well stay in North Korea and join the lines for food aid...oh wait, that aid is only reserved for the North Korean Army.  ::)

Reuters

American in North Korea denounces U.S., seeks Venezuela asylum: media

SEOUL (Reuters) - A U.S. citizen who illegally entered North Korea delivered a lengthy denunciation of U.S. domestic and foreign policy on Sunday and said he was seeking political asylum in Venezuela, the North's official media said.

The man identified himself as Arturo Pierre Martinez, 29, from El Paso, Texas, in video footage of a press conference released by the North's KCNA news agency. He said he had taken "a risky journey to reach the (North) so that I could pass along some very valuable and disturbing information".

A KCNA article released with the footage said Martinez spoke of human rights violations committed by the U.S. government and its attempt at forcing imperialist influence and domination on other countries.

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Anyone wanna bet this so-called sub will sink during sea trials?

North Korea Launches Soviet-Era Style Ballistic Missile Submarine

Deploying new nuclear-capable vessel would significantly increase threat to South Korea and US.

North Korea has launched a domestically built submarine that is designed to fire ballistic missiles, raising new concerns about the growing threat posed by Pyongyang's missile and nuclear programmes.

Military sources in South Korea say the vessel is based on a Golf II-class Soviet submarine that the North acquired in 1993, ostensibly for scrapping. The 3,500-ton Golf II was equipped with submarine-launched ballistic missiles that could carry a 2,600 lb warhead more than 880 miles.

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Source: Telegraph
 
I can see a movie where Seth Rogan and James Franco hijack it and bring it to the U.S.  The Hunt for Two Idiots, or something....
 
Pig boats make me shudder at the best of times but I really feel for the poor bastards who'll sail in this contraption.  Bigger balls than I have.
 
jollyjacktar said:
Pig boats make me shudder at the best of times but I really feel for the poor bastards who'll sail in this contraption.  Bigger balls than I have.

To this army dude the term "sailing" implies more forward motion then downward, so I'm not sure how much sailing will actually be done in it.
 
Looking at pictures of the boat in question, if they tried firing a missile from it, the damn thing would probably explode.
 
Recounting the crimes of the DPRK. Cyber attacks against Sony is the very least of what they do:



Kim Jong Un: Slavetrader
Posted By Robert Zubrin On January 3, 2015 @ 11:31 pm In Asia,Books,Culture,Koreas,Media,Politics,World News | 28 Comments

The efforts of the North Korean regime to force the suppression of The Interview, a comedy which subjects its leader to  a small dose of long-overdue mockery, have aroused the anger of many Americans, with particular umbrage being expressed by a number of leading Hollywood personalities. They are right to be mad, for certainly, as even President Obama pointed out, we cannot accept criminal attempts by foreign dictatorships to interfere with freedom of speech in our country. Yet it must also be said that there is a narcissistic quality to the current outrage over this particular crime of the North Korean government, as it has long been guilty of far worse.

North Korea is sometimes described as the world’s last remaining Stalinist regime. But this is a slander — of Stalinism. In fact, North Korea is actually a vast — and monstrously cruel — slave labor plantation and human trafficking operation run for the profit and hedonistic pleasure of its morally degenerate rulers.

Here is an extract [1]from the U.S. State Department 2009 report on human trafficking by North Korea:

The Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK or North Korea) is a source country for men, women, and children trafficked for the purposes of forced labor and commercial sexual exploitation. The most common form of trafficking involves North Korean women and girls subjected to involuntary servitude after willingly crossing the border into the People’s Republic of China (PRC). Many of them are from North Hamgyong province, one of the poorest provinces in the country, located near the Chinese border. Once in China, they are picked up by traffickers and sold as brides to PRC nationals, often of Korean ethnicity. In other cases, North Korean women and girls are lured out of North Korea to escape poor economic, social, and political conditions by the promise of food, jobs, and freedom, only to be forced into prostitution, marriage, or exploitative labor arrangements once in China. North Koreans trafficked into or within the PRC are often passed from one trafficker to the next until they reach their ultimate destinations. In some cases, women and girls may be sold to traffickers by their families or acquaintances. Women sold as brides are sometimes re-abducted by the traffickers or are sold by husbands who no longer want them. In some cases, North Korean women are sold multiple times to different men by the same trafficker. Trafficking networks of Korean-Chinese and North Korean men operate in Northeast China and along the China-DPRK border, where they seek out North Korean women and girls. There are some reports that businessmen who operate along the China-DPRK border use their trade routes along the Yalu River to traffic North Korean women into China. While many women trafficked into China are sold as brides, some North Korean women in China are forced to work in the highly exploitative sex industry, including as prostitutes in brothels and in internet sex operations. Many victims of trafficking, unable to speak Chinese, are held as virtual prisoners. The illegal status of North Koreans in the PRC and other Southeast Asian countries increases their vulnerability to trafficking for purposes of forced labor and sexual exploitation. NGOs estimate that tens of thousands of North Koreans presently live in China, more than half of whom are women; according to some estimates, over 80 percent of North Korean refugees are victims of human trafficking.

To this, the 2010 State Department report adds: [2]

The North Korean government is directly involved in subjecting North Koreans to forced labor in prison camps. An estimated 150,000 to 200,000 persons are held in detention camps in remote areas of the country; many of these prisoners were not duly convicted of a criminal offense. In prison camps, all prisoners, including children, are subject to forced labor, including logging, mining, and farming for long hours under harsh conditions. Reports indicate that political prisoners endure severe conditions, including little food or medical care, and brutal punishments; many are not expected to survive. Many prisoners fell ill or died, due to harsh labor conditions, inadequate food, beatings, lack of medical care, and unhygienic conditions.

The North Korean government recruits workers for bilateral contracts with foreign governments, including in Russia, countries in Africa, Central and Eastern Europe, East and Southeast Asia, including Mongolia, and the Middle East. There are credible reports that many North Korean workers sent abroad by the regime under these contracts are subjected to forced labor, with their movement and communications constantly under surveillance and restricted by North Korean government “minders.” Credible reports state that they face threats of government reprisals against them or their relatives in North Korea if they attempt to escape or complain to outside parties. Worker salaries are deposited into accounts controlled by the North Korean government, which keeps most of the money, claiming fees for various “voluntary” contributions to government endeavors. Workers only receive a fraction of the money paid to the North Korean government for their work. Tens of thousands of North Korean workers are estimated to be employed in Russian logging camps, where they reportedly have only two days of rest per year and face punishments when they fail to meet production targets. Wages of some North Korean workers employed in Russia reportedly were withheld until the laborers returned home, in a coercive tactic by North Korean authorities to compel their labor. North Korean workers at joint ventures with foreign investors within the DPRK are employed under arrangements similar to those that apply to overseas contract workers.

It gets worse. The North Korean rulers willfully starve the nation’s entire population, using the foreign exchange they get by selling their subjects as forced labor and sex slaves abroad to buy weaponry, palaces, and a fantastic assortment of luxuries for themselves. Rations are so low that the growth of children is stunted, resulting in an average height of North Korean ten year olds being some 8 inches less than their opposite numbers in South Korea. Over the past twenty years, more than 5 percent of the general population has starved to death. Conditions are so bad that men pay government officials heavy bribes in order to be chosen to be sent to slave labor camps in Siberia. In Stalinist Russia, people feared such a fate. In North Korea today, they beg for it.

While their people starve, the Korean rulers gorge themselves. As recounted by his former chef, Fujimoto Kenji , during the height of a mid-1990s famine, dictator Kim Jong Il (the son of Kim Il Sung and the father of current dictator Kim Jong Un) ordered him to go to Japan to buy nearly three thousand pounds of the best sushi and squid, as well as red-bean rice cakes and Japanese cigarettes, then on to Thailand for the best papayas and mangoes, then Czechoslovakia for Pilsner beer, to Denmark for bacon, to France for Perrier water, and to Iran and Uzbekistan for pistachios and caviar, all for consumption by himself and his “joy brigade” of Norwegian models during revels in his ten palaces.

In order to induce their subjects to accept such treatment, the North Korean regime has created a cult in which its leaders are held to be gods. Accordingly, nearly all Christian churches and Buddhist temples (except for a few in the capital for use by foreigners) have been destroyed, while 40,000 idols (including one $800 million seventy-foot high gilded edition) of the nation’s “eternal president” Kim Il Sung have been erected across the country. The calendar has also been changed, replacing the birth of Christ with that of Kim IL Sung (in 1912) as the starting point for human history. The cult also includes an ideology of racial purity. Thus, when its female sex slaves are returned from China, any girls who have been made pregnant by Chinese men are subject to forced abortions, or, if they give birth, they have to watch while their “racially impure” babies are killed on the spot.

No competing religions are tolerated, with Christianity particularly frowned upon.  Possession of a Bible by one family member can result in execution of the entire family, sometimes by extraordinarily cruel means. In one incident reported by Melanie Kirkpatrick in her book Escape from North Korea, [3]  “five secret Christians were bound, laid on a highway, and run over by a steamroller.”

Any Korean can be picked up by police at any time right off the street and sent to a slave camp without trial or any kind of due process whatsoever. There, as former National Security Council staffer Victor Cha describes in his book The Impossible State, [4] “conditions… are subhuman….Generally, inmates are woken up between four and six AM to begin slave labor. The types of work the prisoners are tasked with vary greatly, but are often hard, physical labor for men and young female prisoners, such as mining, logging, brick making, and general construction. The work conditions on these sites are incredibly dangerous, with large numbers of work-related deaths, and defectors reporting shockingly high counts of amputees, cripples, hunchbacks, and other generally deformed prisoners as a result of their toil. The older or weaker men or women are forced to carry out light manufacturing jobs, such as sewing clothes and making belts and shoes, and they are driven no less hard than their younger, stronger counterparts. The work is ceaseless and subject to highly strict quotas, which are enforced brutally. Punishments for working too slow or not making a quota range from reductions in already-measly food rations to prolonged solitary confinement to physical abuse to torture. …Usually, the only justifiable reason to provide prisoners with a break is to gather them to witness a public execution, most often for prisoners who have tried to escape. Execution methods run the gamut, but are similar to those practiced outside prison walls in North Korean society, including hanging, sheeting, stoning (which requires prisoner participation), and, in one particularly grotesque case, being dragged behind a moving car. … Some prison guards force inmates to climb the fences, just so they can shoot them down for recreation or target practice….female inmates, in particular, are subject to the pain and humiliation of sexual abuse.”

North Korea does not confine this treatment to its own subjects. It actively engages in kidnapping others, most frequently from South Korea or Japan, to exploit as slaves as well. In addition, it engages in terrorism, including repeated attempts to assassinate South Korean political leaders, in one case blowing up an airliner with 150 people on board to do so.

One could go on, at great length, detailing ever more hideous aspects of this monstrous regime. Suffice to say, however, that its offense of trying to suppress Hollywood mockery compares to its true criminality in about the same degree as similar (largely successful) efforts by Nazi Germany to chill film criticism in the 1930s did to the full measure of the depravity of the Third Reich. Unfortunately, however, Seth Rogen’s Interview comedy, even if ultimately broadly released, will no more suffice to defeat Kim Jong Un than Charlie Chaplin’s Great Dictator satire was able to stop Hitler. As then, so now, rather more potent means will be required. Perhaps, though, if they wish to strike back, those in Hollywood now outraged by the gentlest touch of Kim’s totalitarianism can help muster the forces to destroy it by making a blockbuster that truly exposes it to the light of day.

There’s plenty of material available for the screenplay. Many of the chilling accounts in Kirkpatrick’s Escape from North Korea could serve. My favorite, though, would be The Aquariums of Pyongyang: [5] Ten Years in the North Korean Gulag,  the gripping autobiography of Kang Chol-Hwan, a boy whom the priesthood of the divine Kim Il Sung sentenced to a slave labor camp at the age of nine for the crime of having the wrong grandparents.

That might be a lot to expect from Hollywood, some of whose leading stars, such as Martin Sheen, have acted out their fashionable anti-Americanism by serving as spokesmen for the North Korean front group ANSWER.  So maybe we’ll have to settle for a documentary, made with the more limited resources of the film community’s pro-freedom underground.

They could call it Why We Fight.

Article printed from PJ Media: http://pjmedia.com

URL to article: http://pjmedia.com/blog/kim-jong-un-slavetrader/

URLs in this post:

[1] an extract : http://gvnet.com/humantrafficking/NorthKorea-2.htm :
[2] report adds:: http://www.state.gov/j/tip/rls/tiprpt/2010/142760.htm
[3] Escape from North Korea,: http://www.amazon.com/Escape-North-Korea-Underground-Railroad/dp/1594037299/ref=tmm_pap_title_0?ie=UTF8&qid=1419271077&sr=8-1
[4] The Impossible State,: http://www.amazon.com/Impossible-State-North-Korea-Future-ebook/dp/B006QBDKQS/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1419276385&sr=8-1&keywords=The+Impossible+State
[5] The Aquariums of Pyongyang:: http://www.amazon.com/Aquariums-Pyongyang-Years-North-Korean/dp/0465011047/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1419618725&sr=1-1&keywords=aquariums+of+pyongyang

Suggesting Hollywood would produce or film any of the stories in the last paragraph presumes a moral courage which is severely lacking in there. Given the speed which they rolled over (and the way Hollywood ignores other places with equally monstrous regimes and compelling human stories of courage).
 
More distrust between Beijing and Pyongyang?

Reuters

China enlists citizens to patrol border with North Korea: state media

BEIJING (Reuters) - China is sending civilian militias to help secure the border it shares with North Korea, state media said, in the wake of two reported killings of Chinese citizens by North Koreans that could strain ties between Pyongyang and its sole major ally.

The China Defence News said on Wednesday it had established a civilian-military defense system in the Danubian prefecture of Jilting province. Danubian shares a border of about 500 km (310 miles) with North Korea.

"China and North Korea are both keeping guard on the border ...," the newspaper said. "The situation is more complicated and relying on just one party would make it difficult to achieve effective control."

The government has also "guided the establishment of militia patrols" to guard border villages. Every 10 neighboring households would have their own border security group and there would be 24-hour video surveillance, the newspaper said.

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North Korea looking for another hand that feeds...to bite.

Nikkei Asian Review

North Korea looks to cut Chinese apron strings
ATSUSHI IJUIN

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In China, industry representatives say many apparel and seafood products from North Korea are re-exported to third countries, typically from such ports as Dalian and Hunchun. If the North's producers could ship directly to Japan and South Korea, they would enjoy higher margins. Managers at North Korean factories say Chinese importers demand ever-greater concessions. This helps explain their eagerness to start trading with Japan and the South again.

    At present, China accounts for nearly 80% of North Korea's trade, making it imperative for Pyongyang to diversify. At the plenary session of the Central Committee of the Workers' Party of Korea in March 2013, Kim Jong Un personally urged top party officials to find new trading partners.

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A ploy for Russia to attract North Korea to upgrade or replace the North Korean Army's antiquated Soviet-era hardware?

Yahoo Finance

Russia has announced plans for joint military drills with North Korea

A top Russian military official has stated that Moscow plans on conducting joint military exercises with North Korea, a number of media outlets have reported.

“We are planning an expansion of the communication lines of our military central command," Valery Gerasimov, the chief of staff of the Russian armed forces, said at a meeting attended by the heads of all of Russia's armed forces branches, according to Newsweek. "We are entering preliminary negotiations with the armed forces of Brazil, Vietnam, Cuba and the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea.”

If negotiations are successful, the military drills will include naval and air force exercises as well as joint drills between ground troops from Russia and North Korea.

Although military exercises involving both North Korea and Russia could increase tensions along the Korean peninsula — where the US routinely conducts joint military drills with South Korea — any military relationship between Moscow and Pyongyang will likely be superficial.

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Some how this sounds familiar....oh wait....

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rXaUD1XVjYg

 
North Korea adding to its SSM arsenal:

Reuters

North Korea test-fires new anti-ship cruise missile

By James Pearson

SEOUL (Reuters) - North Korea has test-fired a new anti-ship cruise missile, images released by state media on Saturday showed, demonstrating the increased capability of the secretive state's outdated navy.

The images were released in the lead-up to U.S.-South Korean military exercises this spring. North Korea routinely seeks to raise tensions ahead of the annual drills, although this year Pyongyang has also offered to suspend nuclear testing if Washington calls off the exercises.

The images, which were shown on the front page of the ruling Workers' Party Rodong Sinmun newspaper, showed leader Kim Jong Un observing the missile being fired from a small naval vessel.

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The cycle of brinksmanship, threats and blackmail by Pyongyang continues:

Defense News

North Korea Fires Short-Range Missiles Into Sea
Agence France-Presse 1:01 p.m. EST February 8, 2015

SEOUL, South Korea — North Korea test-fired five short-range missiles into the sea off its east coast Sunday, raising cross-border tensions ahead of Seoul's planned joint army drills with the US.

The North fired the missiles into the East Sea (Sea of Japan) from its eastern city of Wonsan between 4:20-5:10 pm, (0720-0810 GMT) Seoul's defence ministry spokesman told AFP.

They flew about 200 kilometers (124 miles) before landing.

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Kim Jong Un's new secret weapon...yes it's horrifying.  ;D

Kim Jong Un has an amazing new haircut. We have many, many questions.
Amanda Taub
February 19, 2015

Kim_Jong_Un_Haircut.0.0.jpg


This new haircut raises a number of important questions for anyone who follows North Korean politics. For instance:

- What instructions did Kim Jong Un give his barber that resulted in this style?

- Was it, "Hey, you know trapezoids?"

- Or perhaps, "You know my main priority is to ensure that my ears do not feel crowded, let's work on a 'do that really lets the old face-handles breathe"?

- Kim Jong Un famously adopted his shaved-sided, center-parted haircut as a way to signal connection with his grandfather and the country's founding leader, Kim Il Sung. Now the sides are still shaved, but the center part is GONE. What does it mean?

- Could it be that the the new style conveys an intent to embrace the legacy of his father Kim Jong Il, who also often sported a uniform crest of hair unbroken by any parting?

- Or is it intended to signify that North Korea, like Kim Jong Un's hair, is reaching new heights and cannot be stopped by gravity or any other natural force?

- Does his haircut sail majestically ever-upwards, unlike the North Korean Unha rocket that failed spectacularly after launch in 2012, breaking up over the Sea of Japan?

- Could Kim Jong Un's new haircut carry a warhead?

- Could Kim Jong Un's new haircut target Seoul?

More questions here
 
I wonder how many North Korean merchant ships actually fly their national flag as opposed to flying Panamanian or Liberian flags like many other nations' merchant ships who use them as "flags of convenience"...

Reuters

North Korea shipping firm skirts sanctions by renaming ships: U.N. panel
By Louis Charbonneau and Michelle Nichols

UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - A U.N.-blacklisted North Korean shipping company has renamed most of its vessels in a bid to disguise their origin and continues its illicit shipments in violation of United Nations sanctions, according to a U.N. experts report seen by Reuters on Wednesday.

The U.N. Security Council's Panel of Experts on North Korea, which monitors implementation of sanctions on Pyongyang, also said in the 76-page report that North Korea "continued to defy Security Council resolutions by persisting with its nuclear and ballistic missile programs."

North Korea is under United Nations sanctions because of its nuclear tests and missile launches. In addition to arms, Pyongyang is banned from importing and exporting nuclear and missile technology and is not allowed to import luxury goods.

(...SNIPPED)
 
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